<h2> The Magic Book </h2>
<h3> [From Capullos de Rosa, por D. Enrique Ceballos Quintana.] </h3>
<p>[From AEventyr fra Zylland samlede og optegnede af Tang Kristensen.
Translated from the Danish by Mrs. Skavgaard-Pedersen.]</p>
<p>There was once an old couple named Peder and Kirsten who had an only son
called Hans. From the time he was a little boy he had been told that on
his sixteenth birthday he must go out into the world and serve his
apprenticeship. So, one fine summer morning, he started off to seek his
fortune with nothing but the clothes he wore on his back.</p>
<p>For many hours he trudged on merrily, now and then stopping to drink from
some clear spring or to pick some ripe fruit from a tree. The little wild
creatures peeped at him from beneath the bushes, and he nodded and smiled,
and wished them 'Good-morning.' After he had been walking for some time he
met an old white-bearded man who was coming along the footpath. The boy
would not step aside, and the man was determined not to do so either, so
they ran against one another with a bump.</p>
<p>'It seems to me,' said the old fellow, 'that a boy should give way to an
old man.'</p>
<p>'The path is for me as well as for you,' answered young Hans saucily, for
he had never been taught politeness.</p>
<p>'Well, that's true enough,' answered the other mildly. 'And where are you
going?'</p>
<p>'I am going into service,' said Hans.</p>
<p>'Then you can come and serve me,' replied the man.</p>
<p>Well, Hans could do that; but what would his wages be?</p>
<p>'Two pounds a year, and nothing to do but keep some rooms clean,' said the
new-comer.</p>
<p>This seemed to Hans to be easy enough; so he agreed to enter the old man's
service, and they set out together. On their way they crossed a deep
valley and came to a mountain, where the man opened a trapdoor, and
bidding Hans follow him, he crept in and began to go down a long flight of
steps. When they got to the bottom Hans saw a large number of rooms lit by
many lamps and full of beautiful things. While he was looking round the
old man said to him:</p>
<p>'Now you know what you have to do. You must keep these rooms clean, and
strew sand on the floor every day. Here is a table where you will always
find food and drink, and there is your bed. You see there are a great many
suits of clothes hanging on the wall, and you may wear any you please; but
remember that you are never to open this locked door. If you do ill will
befall you. Farewell, for I am going away again and cannot tell when I may
return.</p>
<p>No sooner had the old man disappeared than Hans sat down to a good meal,
and after that went to bed and slept until the morning. At first he could
not remember what had happened to him, but by-and-by he jumped up and went
into all the rooms, which he examined carefully.</p>
<p>'How foolish to bid me to put sand on the floors,' he thought, 'when there
is nobody here by myself! I shall do nothing of the sort.' And so he shut
the doors quickly, and only cleaned and set in order his own room. And
after the first few days he felt that that was unnecessary too, because no
one came there to see if the rooms where clean or not. At last he did no
work at all, but just sat and wondered what was behind the locked door,
till he determined to go and look for himself.</p>
<p>The key turned easily in the lock. Hans entered, half frightened at what
he was doing, and the first thing he beheld was a heap of bones. That was
not very cheerful; and he was just going out again when his eye fell on a
shelf of books. Here was a good way of passing the time, he thought, for
he was fond of reading, and he took one of the books from the shelf. It
was all about magic, and told you how you could change yourself into
anything in the world you liked. Could anything be more exciting or more
useful? So he put it in his pocket, and ran quickly away out of the
mountain by a little door which had been left open.</p>
<p>When he got home his parents asked him what he had been doing and where he
had got the fine clothes he wore.</p>
<p>'Oh, I earned them myself,' answered he.</p>
<p>'You never earned them in this short time,' said his father. 'Be off with
you; I won't keep you here. I will have no thieves in my house!'</p>
<p>'Well I only came to help you,' replied the boy sulkily. 'Now I'll be off,
as you wish; but to-morrow morning when you rise you will see a great dog
at the door. Do not drive it away, but take it to the castle and sell it
to the duke, and they will give you ten dollars for it; only you must
bring the strap you lead it with, back to the house.'</p>
<p>Sure enough the next day the dog was standing at the door waiting to be
let in. The old man was rather afraid of getting into trouble, but his
wife urged him to sell the dog as the boy had bidden him, so he took it up
to the castle and sold it to the duke for ten dollars. But he did not
forget to take off the strap with which he had led the animal, and to
carry it home. When he got there old Kirsten met him at the door.</p>
<p>'Well, Peder, and have you sold the dog?' asked she.</p>
<p>'Yes, Kirsten; and I have brought back ten dollars, as the boy told us,'
answered Peder.</p>
<p>'Ay! but that's fine!' said his wife. 'Now you see what one gets by doing
as one is bid; if it had not been for me you would have driven the dog
away again, and we should have lost the money. After all, I always know
what is best.'</p>
<p>'Nonsense!' said her husband; 'women always think they know best. I should
have sold the dog just the same whatever you had told me. Put the money
away in a safe place, and don't talk so much.'</p>
<p>The next day Hans came again; but though everything had turned out as he
had foretold, he found that his father was still not quite satisfied.</p>
<p>'Be off with you!' said he, 'you'll get us into trouble.'</p>
<p>'I haven't helped you enough yet,' replied the boy. 'To-morrow there will
come a great fat cow, as big as the house. Take it to the king's palace
and you'll get as much as a thousand dollars for it. Only you must
unfasten the halter you lead it with and bring it back, and don't return
by the high road, but through the forest.'</p>
<p>The next day, when the couple rose, they saw an enormous head looking in
at their bedroom window, and behind it was a cow which was nearly as big
as their hut. Kirsten was wild with joy to think of the money the cow
would bring them.</p>
<p>'But how are you going to put the rope over her head?' asked she.</p>
<p>'Wait and you'll see, mother,' answered her husband. Then Peder took the
ladder that led up to the hayloft and set it against the cow's neck, and
he climbed up and slipped the rope over her head. When he had made sure
that the noose was fast they started for the palace, and met the king
himself walking in his grounds.</p>
<p>'I heard that the princess was going to be married,' said Peder, 'so I've
brought your majesty a cow which is bigger than any cow that was ever
seen. Will your majesty deign to buy it?'</p>
<p>The king had, in truth, never seen so large a beast, and he willingly paid
the thousand dollars, which was the price demanded; but Peder remembered
to take off the halter before he left. After he was gone the king sent for
the butcher and told him to kill the animal for the wedding feast. The
butcher got ready his pole-axe; but just as he was going to strike, the
cow changed itself into a dove and flew away, and the butcher stood
staring after it as if he were turned to stone. However, as the dove could
not be found, he was obliged to tell the king what had happened, and the
king in his turn despatched messengers to capture the old man and bring
him back. But Peder was safe in the woods, and could not be found. When at
last he felt the danger was over, and he might go home, Kirsten nearly
fainted with joy at the sight of all the money he brought with him.</p>
<p>'Now that we are rich people we must build a bigger house,' cried she; and
was vexed to find that Peder only shook his head and said: 'No; if they
did that people would talk, and say they had got their wealth by
ill-doing.'</p>
<p>A few mornings later Hans came again.</p>
<p>'Be off before you get us into trouble,' said his father. 'So far the
money has come right enough, but I don't trust it.'</p>
<p>'Don't worry over that, father,' said Hans. 'To-morrow you will find a
horse outside by the gate. Ride it to market and you will get a thousand
dollars for it. Only don't forget to loosen the bridle when you sell it.'</p>
<p>Well, in the morning there was the horse; Kirsten had never seen so find
an animal. 'Take care it doesn't hurt you, Peder,' said she.</p>
<p>'Nonsense, wife,' answered he crossly. 'When I was a lad I lived with
horses, and could ride anything for twenty miles round.' But that was not
quite the truth, for he had never mounted a horse in his life.</p>
<p>Still, the animal was quiet enough, so Peder got safely to market on its
back. There he met a man who offered nine hundred and ninety-nine dollars
for it, but Peder would take nothing less than a thousand. At last there
came an old, grey-bearded man who looked at the horse and agreed to buy
it; but the moment he touched it the horse began to kick and plunge. 'I
must take the bridle off,' said Peder. 'It is not to be sold with the
animal as is usually the case.'</p>
<p>'I'll give you a hundred dollars for the bridle,' said the old man, taking
out his purse.</p>
<p>'No, I can't sell it,' replied Hans's father.</p>
<p>'Five hundred dollars!'</p>
<p>'No.'</p>
<p>'A thousand!'</p>
<p>At this splendid offer Peder's prudence gave way; it was a shame to let so
much money go. So he agreed to accept it. But he could hardly hold the
horse, it became so unmanageable. So he gave the animal in charge to the
old man, and went home with his two thousand dollars.</p>
<p>Kirsten, of course, was delighted at this new piece of good fortune, and
insisted that the new house should be built and land bought. This time
Peder consented, and soon they had quite a fine farm.</p>
<p>Meanwhile the old man rode off on his new purchase, and when he came to a
smithy he asked the smith to forge shoes for the horse. The smith proposed
that they should first have a drink together, and the horse was tied up by
the spring whilst they went indoors. The day was hot, and both men were
thirsty, and, besides, they had much to say; and so the hours slipped by
and found them still talking. Then the servant girl came out to fetch a
pail of water, and, being a kind-hearted lass, she gave some to the horse
to drink. What was her surprise when the animal said to her: 'Take off my
bridle and you will save my life.'</p>
<p>'I dare not,' said she; 'your master will be so angry.'</p>
<p>'He cannot hurt you,' answered the horse, 'and you will save my life.'</p>
<p>At that she took off the bridle; but nearly fainted with astonishment when
the horse turned into a dove and flew away just as the old man came out of
the house. Directly he saw what had happened he changed himself into a
hawk and flew after the dove. Over the woods and fields they went, and at
length they reached a king's palace surrounded by beautiful gardens. The
princess was walking with her attendants in the rose garden when the dove
turned itself into a gold ring and fell at her feet.</p>
<p>'Why, here is a ring!' she cried, 'where could it have come from?' And
picking it up she put it on her finger. As she did so the hill-man lost
his power over Hans—for of course you understand that it was he who
had been the dog, the cow, the horse and the dove.</p>
<p>'Well, that is really strange,' said the princess. 'It fits me as though
it had been made for me!'</p>
<p>Just at that moment up came the king.</p>
<p>'Look at what I have found!' cried his daughter.</p>
<p>'Well, that is not worth much, my dear,' said he. 'Besides, you have rings
enough, I should think.'</p>
<p>'Never mind, I like it,' replied the princess.</p>
<p>But as soon as she was alone, to her amazement, the ring suddenly left her
finger and became a man. You can imagine how frightened she was, as,
indeed, anybody would have been; but in an instant the man became a ring
again, and then turned back to a man, and so it went on for some time
until she began to get used to these sudden changes.</p>
<p>'I am sorry I frightened you,' said Hans, when he thought he could safely
speak to the princess without making her scream. 'I took refuge with you
because the old hill-man, whom I have offended, was trying to kill me, and
here I am safe.'</p>
<p>'You had better stay here then,' said the princess. So Hans stayed, and he
and she became good friends; though, of course, he only became a man when
no one else was present.</p>
<p>This was all very well; but, one day, as they were talking together, the
king happened to enter the room, and although Hans quickly changed himself
into a ring again it was too late.</p>
<p>The king was terribly angry.</p>
<p>'So this is why you have refused to marry all the kings and princes who
have sought your hand?' he cried.</p>
<p>And, without waiting for her to speak, he commanded that his daughter
should be walled up in the summer-house and starved to death with her
lover.</p>
<p>That evening the poor princess, still wearing her ring, was put into the
summer-house with enough food to last for three days, and the door was
bricked up. But at the end of a week or two the king thought it was time
to give her a grand funeral, in spite of her bad behaviour, and he had the
summer-house opened. He could hardly believe his eyes when he found that
the princess was not there, nor Hans either. Instead, there lay at his
feet a large hole, big enough for two people to pass through.</p>
<p>Now what had happened was this.</p>
<p>When the princess and Hans had given up hope, and cast themselves down on
the ground to die, they fell down this hole, and right through the earth
as well, and at last they tumbled into a castle built of pure gold at the
other side of the world, and there they lived happily. But of this, of
course, the king knew nothing.</p>
<p>'Will anyone go down and see where the passage leads to?' he asked,
turning to his guards and courtiers. 'I will reward splendidly the man who
is brave enough to explore it.'</p>
<p>For a long time nobody answered. The hole was dark and deep, and if it had
a bottom no one could see it. At length a soldier, who was a careless sort
of fellow, offered himself for the service, and cautiously lowered himself
into the darkness. But in a moment he, too, fell down, down, down. Was he
going to fall for ever, he wondered! Oh, how thankful he was in the end to
reach the castle, and to meet the princess and Hans, looking quite well
and not at all as if they had been starved. They began to talk, and the
soldier told them that the king was very sorry for the way he had treated
his daughter, and wished day and night that he could have her back again.</p>
<p>Then they all took ship and sailed home, and when they came to the
princess's country, Hans disguised himself as the sovereign of a
neighbouring kingdom, and went up to the palace alone. He was given a
hearty welcome by the king, who prided himself on his hospitality, and a
banquet was commanded in his honour. That evening, whilst they sat
drinking their wine, Hans said to the king:</p>
<p>'I have heard the fame of your majesty's wisdom, and I have travelled from
far to ask your counsel. A man in my country has buried his daughter alive
because she loved a youth who was born a peasant. How shall I punish this
unnatural father, for it is left to me to give judgment?'</p>
<p>The king, who was still truly grieved for his daughter's loss, answered
quickly:</p>
<p>'Burn him alive, and strew his ashes all over the kingdom.'</p>
<p>Hans looked at him steadily for a moment, and then threw off his disguise.</p>
<p>'You are the man,' said he; 'and I am he who loved your daughter, and
became a gold ring on her finger. She is safe, and waiting not far from
here; but you have pronounced judgment on yourself.'</p>
<p>Then the king fell on his knees and begged for mercy; and as he had in
other respects been a good father, they forgave him. The wedding of Hans
and the princess was celebrated with great festivities which lasted a
month. As for the hill-man he intended to be present; but whilst he was
walking along a street which led to the palace a loose stone fell on his
head and killed him. So Hans and the princess lived in peace and happiness
all their days, and when the old king died they reigned instead of him.</p>
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